KISSIMMEE - When Jim Champlin went into his local state unemployment center to find a job, he never imagined it would land him in the Osceola County Jail.But that's what happened after Champlin, 48, of Port Richey, was told by state officials to report for an interview with a company called The Norwood Group at a diner in Tampa.``They said not to go directly to the business but to call Mr. [Todd] Norwood first,'' Champlin said. ``I was a little suspicious but I figured hey, this is a referral from the unemployment office.

WALT DISNEY Co.'s Consumer Products Division plans to move its Latin American regional operations from Mexico City to Miami, division spokesman Chuck Champlin said Wednesday. The regional office will be in charge of licensing of Disney consumer products to markets in the Southern Hemisphere. The Miami Herald reported Wednesday that the move will take place in July, but Champlin said he could not confirm that. The company will leave 12 workers in Mexico City, down from 23, and will have a 20-member work force in Miami.

A grand jury will not hear evidence in the January fatal shooting of a DeBary man by a Volusia County deputy sheriff, the State Attorney's Office said.Richard Wayland Champlin, 44, was killed by a single blast from a 12-gauge shotgun on Jan. 24 at his mother's home at 4 Darosa Ave., DeBary.Champlin, armed with a 9mm Browning semiautomatic pistol, wounded Deputy Roy Puckett, 54, who was investigating a report that shots had been fired in the area.Deputy George Tracy Hernlen, 40, who had gone to Puckett's aid, killed Champlin when Champlin leveled his pistol at him and a sheriff's sergeant, a Sheriff's Office internal affairs report and a Florida Department of Law Enforcement report show.

A man accused of stealing computer equipment containing important records of children with cancer had a change of heart and turned himself in. Michael R. Champlin, 25, went to police headquarters Friday after seeing news reports of the burglary at the Charleston office of Camp Happy Days, which sponsors a summer camp for children with cancer, police said. ''He said he was depressed and had been drinking'' when he decided to commit the burglary, said a deputy who asked not to be identified.

A grand jury will not hear evidence in the January fatal shooting of a DeBary man by a Volusia County deputy sheriff, the State Attorney's Office said.Richard Wayland Champlin, 44, was killed by a single blast from a 12-gauge shotgun on Jan. 24 at his mother's home at 4 Darosa Ave., DeBary.Champlin, armed with a 9mm Browning semiautomatic pistol, wounded Deputy Roy Puckett, 54, who was investigating a report that shots had been fired in the area.Deputy George Tracy Hernlen, 40, who had gone to Puckett's aid, killed Champlin when Champlin leveled his pistol at him and a sheriff's sergeant, a Sheriff's Office internal affairs report and a Florida Department of Law Enforcement report show.

KISSIMMEE - When Jim Champlin went into his local state unemployment center to find a job, he never imagined it would land him in the Osceola County Jail.But that's what happened after Champlin, 48, of Port Richey, was told by state officials to report for an interview with a company called The Norwood Group at a diner in Tampa.``They said not to go directly to the business but to call Mr. [Todd] Norwood first,'' Champlin said. ``I was a little suspicious but I figured hey, this is a referral from the unemployment office.

A man who residents say had shot up the neighborhood on at least two occasions recently was killed by police officers Monday after he fired at and wounded a Volusia County deputy sheriff.Richard Wayland Champlin, 44, of 4 Da-Rosa Ave. was killed by a 12-gauge shotgun blast to the upper torso, Volusia County Sheriff Bob Vogel said. Champlin, who had worked on the Alaska pipeline, was recently fired from his job, Vogel said.Deputy Roy Puckett pulled into Champlin's driveway about 7:30 a.m. after neighbors called police to say shots were fired.

Five Orange City police officers were recognized for their roles in a January incident in which an armed man wounded a deputy and was shot to death by another policeman.Investigators Steve Harscher and John Morgan, Officers Pete Thomas and Tim Johnson, and Cmdr. Jeff Baskoff received letters of commendation and pins from Chief Arthur Lock.Thomas and Johnson were the first officers from Orange City to arrive at 4 Da-Rosa Ave. on Jan. 24, Baskoff said.Thomas, who went to the aid of wounded Volusia Deputy Sheriff Roy Puckett, was in the line of fire.

John Dunlavey had a tough time getting to sleep Monday night after witnessing a gunfire exchange between police and his next door neighbor.''Every time I shut my eyes I could see it,'' Dunlavey said. ''I don't know how that deputy got away.''Richard Wayland Champlin, 44, was killed early Monday morning in a shootout with Volusia County deputy sheriffs. Deputy Roy Puckett, 54, was wounded during the exchange.On Tuesday, senior citizens strolled up and down Da Rosa Avenue. Many sat out on their porches in the balmy springlike weather, but the horror of Monday was not far from their minds.

Five Orange City police officers were recognized for their roles in a January incident in which an armed man wounded a deputy and was shot to death by another policeman.Investigators Steve Harscher and John Morgan, Officers Pete Thomas and Tim Johnson, and Cmdr. Jeff Baskoff received letters of commendation and pins from Chief Arthur Lock.Thomas and Johnson were the first officers from Orange City to arrive at 4 Da-Rosa Ave. on Jan. 24, Baskoff said.Thomas, who went to the aid of wounded Volusia Deputy Sheriff Roy Puckett, was in the line of fire.

John Dunlavey had a tough time getting to sleep Monday night after witnessing a gunfire exchange between police and his next door neighbor.''Every time I shut my eyes I could see it,'' Dunlavey said. ''I don't know how that deputy got away.''Richard Wayland Champlin, 44, was killed early Monday morning in a shootout with Volusia County deputy sheriffs. Deputy Roy Puckett, 54, was wounded during the exchange.On Tuesday, senior citizens strolled up and down Da Rosa Avenue. Many sat out on their porches in the balmy springlike weather, but the horror of Monday was not far from their minds.

A man who residents say had shot up the neighborhood on at least two occasions recently was killed by police officers Monday after he fired at and wounded a Volusia County deputy sheriff.Richard Wayland Champlin, 44, of 4 Da-Rosa Ave. was killed by a 12-gauge shotgun blast to the upper torso, Volusia County Sheriff Bob Vogel said. Champlin, who had worked on the Alaska pipeline, was recently fired from his job, Vogel said.Deputy Roy Puckett pulled into Champlin's driveway about 7:30 a.m. after neighbors called police to say shots were fired.

WALT DISNEY Co.'s Consumer Products Division plans to move its Latin American regional operations from Mexico City to Miami, division spokesman Chuck Champlin said Wednesday. The regional office will be in charge of licensing of Disney consumer products to markets in the Southern Hemisphere. The Miami Herald reported Wednesday that the move will take place in July, but Champlin said he could not confirm that. The company will leave 12 workers in Mexico City, down from 23, and will have a 20-member work force in Miami.

A man accused of stealing computer equipment containing important records of children with cancer had a change of heart and turned himself in. Michael R. Champlin, 25, went to police headquarters Friday after seeing news reports of the burglary at the Charleston office of Camp Happy Days, which sponsors a summer camp for children with cancer, police said. ''He said he was depressed and had been drinking'' when he decided to commit the burglary, said a deputy who asked not to be identified.

You say you want a Mickey Mouse T-shirt and the kids are clamoring for a burger? Well, if you're in or near Montclair, Calif., the Walt Disney Co. has got you covered.In a shopping mall 40 miles east of Los Angeles, Disney has opened Mickey's Kitchen, the company's first restaurant outside its theme parks and resorts. There, you can chow down on french fries shaped like Mickey or Donald, or pig out on a Hot Diggity Dog, a meatless Mickey Burger or the ''Soup-a-Dee-Doo-Dah'' garden soup.At its new fast-food restaurant, Disney is departing from usual fast-food fare by offering a wider variety of lower-fat, lower-calorie items, including a meatless burger, turkey franks and fresh-fruit frosties.

** Chicago, 18 (Warner Bros. 9 25509-1): They can't blame Peter Cetera, their former lead singer who departed for a solo career. But the members of Chicago have put out yet another album of slick and forgettable pop tunes.Keyboardists Bill Champlin and Robert Lamm now trade lead vocal chores on one mundane mid-tempo love song after another.The production by David Foster features the sort of bombastic buildups on the choruses that help these tracks get plenty of radio airplay, despite mediocre melodies and laughable lyrics.

You say you want a Mickey Mouse T-shirt and the kids are clamoring for a burger? Well, if you're in or near Montclair, Calif., the Walt Disney Co. has got you covered.In a shopping mall 40 miles east of Los Angeles, Disney has opened Mickey's Kitchen, the company's first restaurant outside its theme parks and resorts. There, you can chow down on french fries shaped like Mickey or Donald, or pig out on a Hot Diggity Dog, a meatless Mickey Burger or the ''Soup-a-Dee-Doo-Dah'' garden soup.At its new fast-food restaurant, Disney is departing from usual fast-food fare by offering a wider variety of lower-fat, lower-calorie items, including a meatless burger, turkey franks and fresh-fruit frosties.

How can a band hope to please fans across a 20-year age span, from screaming, T-shirted teens to mellow, well-dressed baby boomers?That was the challenge Chicago faced at the Orlando Arena Sunday before a crowd of 7,600 as the veteran band played both its brass-fueled rock from the '70s and its lush love songs from the '80s. It was a performance that ranged from coolly proficient at the outset to genuinely spirited at its close.A something-for-everyone attitude prevailed as the show opened with Bill Champlin singing ''Look Away,'' the band's most recent No. 1 hit, followed immediately by ''Make Me Smile,'' Chicago's first Top 40 single, from 1970.